It seems to me that 2M votes on answers and 500K votes on questions does not support the argument of less upvotes on questions. There have to be 4 times as many answers then questions easily.
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malachJul 23 '09 at 10:31

Since we're already talking about the distribution, I suggest 100, 400, 1500. Gold should not be too easy~
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mafuJul 23 '09 at 10:34

I think this may promote people voting up questions, even questions that ought to be closed. People aren't as likely to vote down questions because voting a question down incurs a penalty. So you'll see questions that have upvotes that should otherwise have been downvoted and closed.
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George StockerJan 2 '10 at 19:47

3

I also disagree with this. Besides what George Stocker said, the ratio requirement actually discourages voting on answers.
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mmyersJan 3 '10 at 4:46

Jeff, a couple comments have asked about the ratios of questions to answers, but you haven't addressed it here. It's pretty important. If there were 4 times as many answers as questions, then the 4 times greater number of votes would imply that people were voting for questions just as often as they were for answers, which would mean that encouraging question voting in the form of a badge isn't really needed.
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gnostradamusJan 6 '10 at 16:37

...Actually, I just looked at some of the stats Greg Hewgill has mined from the data dump (hewgill.com/~greg/stackoverflow/stats.html). The "Votes per question by week" and "Votes per answer by week" graphs show that questions get on average 1.25 votes and answers get on average 2 votes. I'm not sure if this is for all/non-CW posts or up/down/all votes, but it does suggest people vote slightly more for answers than questions.
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gnostradamusJan 6 '10 at 17:08

More than one answer per question can be upvoted. Whilst this applies especially perhaps to the questions that ask for many answers (often Community Wiki, e.g. What are some of your oldest programming books that you still use?) it can apply to many other questions. I have only asked one question on SO but upvoted several of the answers as they were helpful to me. If the upvote criterion was changed to 'single most helpful' or 'best' or 'most correct' answer then the question votes and answer votes would be more comparable.

This question is a case in point. I've upvoted the question and two answers. So in this case my voting record is 2:1 (A:Q). While I agree more could be done to encourage voting on questions, I'm not 100% convinced it's a huge problem.
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ChrisFJul 23 '09 at 11:11

Could one option be some kind of banner after you've answered a question that says (something like) "Have you considered up voting this question?" if you haven't voted at all -- After all, I'm only going to answer well written questions; and it is well written questions that we should be encouraging to be upvoted (rather than "What’s your favorite “programmer” cartoon?" or "Is Mono ready for prime time?")

Questions that need clarifications tend to get comments asking for them, not that there is any way to find out if they are updated in the future, but that's another rant altogether ;)

I mean the other way around. Say I ask a question, you come along and write an answer, then you'd get prompted to vote for the question (unless you already have)
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Rowland ShawAug 16 '09 at 7:34

seems a bit naggy to me; the answer is an implicit contribution of time. We have (sadly) many users who ask tons of questions but never vote; I suspect there are almost none who answer tons of questions but never vote. Answerers understand the value of votes most of all...
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Jeff Atwood♦Jan 2 '10 at 8:14

@Jeff: it is easy to forget to vote for questions. Possibly a per-user preference would be useful here?
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SamBApr 15 '10 at 20:12

Just wanted to note that this can be achieved in 4 days, for better or worse.
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Stu ThompsonJul 23 '09 at 9:52

5

True. Should obviously be a bronze badge, though. In any case, some of the "beginner" badges can be obtained very quickly. Furthermore, making it easily accessible would train new users in the practice of voting on questions, and not on only answers.
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Ola EldøyJul 23 '09 at 10:22

I'm compiling my remarks into an answer. Just to make clear: I am in favor of a separate badge for voting on questions, I just do not see a case for it just looking at the number. As I wrote:

It seems to me that 2 million votes on answers and 500,000 votes on questions do not support the argument of less upvotes on questions. There have to be 4 times as many answers than questions easily.

Jeff Atwood then added some numbers about users extensively voting. My answer: So less than 0.4% of the users vote extensively (>800 answer votes). This is statistically not an interesting group. (I would expect more people to vote on answers extensively as there are more answers in the first place.)

What would be interesting to prove the case is the vote/answer and vote/question ratio. My last answer had the id 1170939. Taking away the questions (shared id), using Jeff Atwood's number of 1990598 votes on answers, that gives 2.12 votes per answer. Stack Overflow shows 232022 questions at the moment, with 516783 votes. That is 2.23 votes per question.

When we look at certain posts about when to downvote, what a downvote is to mean, asking for a certain ratio of upvotes and downvotes: what would the criteria be to up/downvote a question?

useful for me +

useful for the community, beginners +

well put +, poorly formulated -

earn me a badge +/-

prevent from being closed +

signal that this should be closed, and I do not have the reputation points to do it -

Again, I would see some badges (gold, silver, bronce). Are there some significant threshholds, points people tend to camp out? Then maybe these points rounded up some are good guesses for badge achievement.

You could also add equivalents of the Epic and Legendary badges: "used up all votes on 50/150 days". Now that the last 10 votes are only good for questions, that would encourage more question votes even if it wasn't counting only votes on questions.

Badge(s) for votes on questions only would make a difference
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Ola EldøyJul 23 '09 at 10:17

I am not denying that, I'm just pointing out that there is an mechanism to promote voting. It is not like there is no incentive, which could be inferred by your question.
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Stu ThompsonJul 23 '09 at 10:36

The point with this was to encourage voting on questions. There is not so much problem with voting on answer, as this works quite well already.
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aweOct 21 '09 at 13:09